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Brianne Olivieri-Mui

Assistant Professor

Brianne Olivieri-Mui is affiliate faculty in research at the OHDSI Center, the Roux Institute. In addition to her appointment at the Roux Institute, she is an assistant professor in the Department of Health Sciences. Olivieri-Mui’s research focuses on using observational data to study HIV and aging particularly focused on care quality, patterns of utilization, and prescribing for the HIV population using nursing homes.

Olivieri-Mui came to the Roux Institute from Hebrew SeniorLife and the Harvard Medical School T32 post-doctoral fellowship program for Translational Research in Aging. Her post-doctoral research focused on understanding the value of aggregate measures of morbidity and their impact on health outcomes, utilization, and HIV treatment for Medicare beneficiaries. This research was a continuation of Olivieri Mui’s dissertation work assessing nursing home HIV care quality that identified significant proportions of the HIV population in nursing homes having no HIV treatment. Before her PhD at Northeastern University, Olivieri-Mui earned her MPH at Hunter College of the City University of New York during her more than 10 year career in clinical and public health in major hospital systems in New York City. She maintains an adjunct scientist role at The Marcus Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew SeniorLife and serves on two MA state advisory boards for the Ending the HIV Epidemic initiative.

Olivieri-Mui spends time every summer enjoying the beauty, food, and hiking around Boothbay Harbor.

Research Overview

Olivieri-Mui’s lab analyzes observational data bases within and outside of the OHDSI center applying traditional and common data model methods to produce epidemiologic empirical evidence to support changes to policy and practice for the care of older people with HIV in nursing homes. She collaborates with Roux students and teaching faculty to create data visualizations, and partners with research faculty having complimentary skills in machine learning, causal inference, biostatistics, and the OHDSI community to develop innovative approaches to using observational data in HIV and aging research.

Areas of Expertise

  • Medicare
  • HIV and Aging
  • LGBT+ Health

Publications

  • Chelsea Wong, Michael Wilczek, Jordon Bosse, Louisa Smith, Justin Manjourides, Ariela Orkaby, Brianne Olivieri-Mui, DEVELOPING A NOVEL FRAILTY INDEX TO STUDY FRAILTY OF SEXUAL AND GENDER MINORITY OLDER ADULTS IN THE ALL OF US DATABASE, Innovation in Aging, Volume 6, Issue Supplement_1, November 2022, Page 752, https://doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.2733
  • Shi SM, Steinberg N, Oh G, Olivieri-Mui B, Sison S, McCarthy EP, Kim DH. Change in a Claims-based Frialty Index, Mortality, and Healthcare Costs in Medicare Beneficiaries. J Geri A. 2023 Jan 11. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glad010. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 36630699.
  • Olivieri-Mui, B., Wilson, I., Shi, S., Montano, M., McCarthy, E. P., Oh, G., & Kim, D. H. (2022). Geriatric Conditions Associated with Nonadherence to Antiretroviral Therapy Among Older People with HIV: The Importance of Frailty. AIDS patient care and STDs, 36(6), 226–235.
  • Olivieri-Mui, B., Shi, S., McCarthy, E., Montano, M., Wilson, I., Oh, G., Manjourides, J., Kim, D. H. (2022). Categorizing comorbid risk for people living with HIV: a latent profile analysis. JAIDS. doi: 10.1097/QAI.0000000000002999
  • Olivieri-Mui, B., Shi, S. M., McCarthy, E. P., & Kim, D. H. (2021). Frailty and Differences in Self-Reported Sexual Functioning Among Older Females and Males in National Social life, Health and Aging Project. Journal of Aging and Health, 89826432110537–8982643211053772. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643211053772
  • Read more on Google Scholar

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